D-day for the Tiwai Point aluminium smelter has been deferred for a month.
Under the contract renegotiated with Meridian Energy in 2013 the smelter's owners, Rio Tinto and Sumitomo, could give notice today of terminating the contract at the end of next year. That would almost certainly mean closure (and a seismic change to the electricity sector) unless they could cover its load - 13 per cent of the national total - from other generators.
But the contract also provides that if the smelter remains in operation the proportion of its power needs covered by Meridian drop by 172MW or 30 per cent at start of 2017, freeing that power up for Meridian to sell elsewhere for a higher price but leaving a hole in the smelter's power demand to cover from other sources.
Read also:
• $50M upside for Tiwai Pt smelter in grid charge proposals
• Questions linger over Tiwai Pt smelter value
Meridian and New Zealand Aluminium Smelters agreed last night to extend the notice of termination deadline to August 3.